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2PM Update: Outer Banks and Hampton Roads remain within Sandy’s forecast cone

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2 PM Update: The latest forecast from the National Hurricane Center keeps the Outer Banks and Hampton Roads within the storm's forecast cone. It appears the latest forecast slowed Sandy's arrival a bit. We now expect the eye of the hurricane off our coast early Monday morning.
- Patrick Rockey

The City of Norfolk is asking residents interested in the latest public safety/storm information to register at www.nixle.com or text their zip code to 888777.
- Todd Corillo

Current weather closings: 

Due to inclement weather conditions, the Household Hazardous Waste (HHW) and E-Waste Convenience Center located at the City’s Waste Management Division, 1176 Pineridge Road,  will be closed on the following dates: 

  • Saturday, October 27
  • Monday, October 29
  • Tuesday, October 30

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Given their geography, Bahamians know a thing or two about hurricanes.

As Hurricane Sandy approached the Bahamas after pummeling eastern Cuba, Nassau resident Stephan Rolle wasn't overly worried.

It is a "small storm" with "mediocre wind," he said of the Category 2 hurricane with winds of 105 mph.

But as the storm churned 65 miles south-southwest of the Bahamas' Long Island on Thursday, Rolle and others also knew they had to prepare.

Rolle, 29, waited for 40 minutes in line at a grocery store to purchase non-perishable goods and bread. He moved the potted plants and emptied part of his family's pool to make room for the rainwater.

Sandy may not be a Category 5 monster, but "we take it seriously, and we just want to make sure we are comfortable," he said.

It's not a bad frame of mind to have, given the amount of damage Sandy did in Cuba.

More than 3,000 buildings were damaged in eastern Cuba, state television reported.

"I lost an upstairs room and part of my roof. There are trees down all over the place. Everyone is in shock. We have never had a storm hit like this," said a woman named Dulce, a doctor in the city of Santiago de Cuba.

As the sun rose Thursday, residents in Santiago began to assess the extent of the damage, which was not known. There was no electricity and very few people had working phones, Dulce said.

Tourists in Santiago rode out the storm in hotels, state media reported.

Heavy rain in Cuba brings with it potential health risks. Flooding over the summer in Granma province contaminated wells that led to a cholera outbreak, the first Cuba had experienced in a century. The same province was once against hit hard by Sandy.

Sandy claimed a pair of lives before reaching Cuba.

A woman in western Haiti's Camp-Perrin died Wednesday when she tried to cross a flooding river in the Ravine du Sud, according to Haitian news agency AHP.

And CNN affiliate TV J reported a man in Jamaica was killed when he was hit by a boulder sent tumbling downhill by the storm's rain.

In the Dominican Republic, Misael Rincon, a CNN iReporter, couldn't sleep as Sandy's rain beat down on Santo Domingo because he knew his neighborhood is prone to flooding.

He drove to work on Thursday, but had to change his route several times as he encountered roads with water levels too high. Even though he drives an SUV, a blue Ford Explorer, he was not high enough off the ground to avoid having water seep in his vehicle.

"I'd say 70% of the streets in Santo Domingo are flooded," he said.

Some cars were submerged, and people with trucks were charging motorists $5 to pull their vehicles to higher ground, he said. There were some good Samaritans, too.

The government ordered evacuations of high-risk zones and canceled schools.

Along the U.S. East Coast, residents were told to be wary headed into the weekend.

Sandy is proving to be a windfall for surfers familiar with tamer tides. Even hundreds of miles away, the storm is kicking up a powerful surf off Fort Lauderdale Beach, Florida.

Jason Russo, a visitor from Connecticut, couldn't resist jumping in.

"I went in the water, I did about three somersaults, strong rip current," he told CNN affiliate WSVN.

Fort Lauderdale's Ocean Rescue advised beachgoers to stay out of the ocean, but acknowledged not everyone would heed the warning.

"The expert surfers will be out there, so we just tell them to be careful and we're there if they need our help," Chief Breck Ballou said. "We're there to go out and get them."

The five-day forecast from the National Hurricane Center predicts the center of the storm will shadow the east coast of the United States in the coming days and could "potentially transition over the weekend into a powerful nor'easter."

Massachusetts Emergency Management says Sandy could make landfall somewhere between Maine and Virginia, bringing with it heavy rain, flooding, high winds and widespread power outages.

Back in the Bahamas, Stephen Aranha reflected on the preparations for Sandy.

Bahamians view hurricanes differently than Americans, he said.

"We know that there is nowhere to go, we can't evacuate," said Aranha, an assistant professor and chairman of the School of Social Sciences at the College of the Bahamas. As a result, building codes are very strict and storm damage is often less than what is seen elsewhere.

He also witnessed the crowds at stores before the storm.

"Lines were long, but the atmosphere was relaxed and friendly, and people were cracking jokes," he said.

Lines were also long at liquor stores, as hurricane parties are quite common.

Aranha bought himself a few bottles of wine, and friends told him that beer, rum and gin were running low in stores.